Goodbye Murakami: Multi-coloured monogram design discontinued at Louis Vuitton, FOREVER!

Louis Vuitton-Murakami  Monogram Multicolor (2003), Cherry Blossom (2003), Eye Monogram serie (dal 2003), Monogram Cerise (2004), Monogramouflage (2008)

Hold on to  your Murakami’s girls!

Louis Vuitton is discontinuing its multi-coloured monogram design.

The look, designed by Takashi Murakami, became a fashion favourite when it hit stores after debuting at the labels’ Spring 2003 show under Marc Jacob’s leadership.

It reached It Bag status after it was launched, with stars like Paris Hilton, Jennifer Lopez and Lil Kim all sporting versions of the fun carrier over the years. But the time has come for the bag to be shelved.

“[It’s] leaving stores at the end of July, forever,” a store associate at Louis Vuitton’s Saks Fifth Avenue concession in New York told WWD.

The fashion label’s flagship store in Manhattan, situated on 57th Street, no longer has the offerings out. The shop, which once decked its entire facade in the print (white background with colourful LVs), keeps what’s left of the collections in its stock room though, so fans can snap up a design before it officially departs stores.

courtesy: bellavitadiines.wordpress.com

courtesy: bellavitadiines.wordpress.com

As well as the white background the line is also available against a black backdrop.

Louis Vuitton is now helmed by Nicolas Ghesquière, but brand representatives have declined to comment on the news.

“[The brand prefers to] look forward,” WWD were told.

Takashi has collaborated on other Louis Vuitton designs, including a pink cherry blossom variation of the iconic LV monogram and a camouflage version, but his multicoloured edition was by far the most popular.

COVER MEDIA

Incredible India: Oberoi Udaivilas named the world’s best hotel.

oberoi-udaivilas

Forget about the ornate-gold detailing of that self-proclaimed 7-star hotel in Dubai, it only caters for people who worshipped TOWIE and Big Brother. It is time to jet off somewhere exotic, i mean REAL exotic paradise in all sense of the word. And if you found India to be as boring as your middle-class upbringing, think again. The most astute of travellers, including royalties, A-list celebrities (those who matters), billionaires (the kind who favors charity over ego) and sophisticated commoners with really good taste jetted off to the only place in the world where NIRVANA is as close to heaven as it should be.

Travel + Leisure just named the Oberoi Udaivilas the best hotel in the world. The hotel was judged by the readers of the luxury magazine in their annual awards for excellence in hospitality and travel.

Situated on the shores of Lake Pichola, in the heart of Udaipur, one of the most romantic and beautiful cities in India, Udaivilas is a luxurious haven built in the style of Mewari palace.

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Readers rate their experiences and evaluate hotels across the world on the following characteristics – rooms and facilities, location, service, restaurants, food and value.

The five-star hotel has a full five out of five rating on TripAdvisor, with many describing their stay as a ‘royal retreat.’

Mr. P.R.S. Oberoi, Executive Chairman, The Oberoi Group said: ‘We are honoured that we have been able to play a small role in ‘Make in India’ by being the best hotel brand in the world and also having the best hotel in the world. 

‘The Brand ‘Oberoi Hotels & Resorts’ has received this recognition from among the 6.5 million readers of Travel + Leisure magazine. 

‘I dedicate this award to our guests and to all employees of The Oberoi Group. Our people are our biggest asset – they have worked passionately to ensure our guests receive warm, personalised and caring service.’ 

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Guests arrive at the domed palace by private boat, and have the option of staying in one of nine Premier rooms which offer views of wildlife such as peacocks and white-spotted deer.

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What’s next for Proenza Schouler?

courtesy: fashionistasdaily

courtesy: fashionistasdaily

On Tuesday, part of the Twitter fashion conversation was “What’s next for Proenza Schouler?” now that the headline New York Fashion Week brand has sold a minority stake to the private equity firm Castanea Partners and gotten its first establishment chief executive. On Tuesday night, that chief executive, Ronald L. Frasch, decided he would spill a bit on what he had planned.

In short: Handbags, handbags, handbags!

Other stuff, too, but he kept coming back to the handbags. As much as we may keep declaring that the It bag is over, it’s still a big thing as a revenue generator.

“We need to get the handbag business moving again,” Mr. Frasch said. “It’s slowed down a bit over the last year and a half, and it’s our highest margin business, with the greatest opportunity for growing points of sale.”

Other than the PS1, Proenza’s breakthrough bag introduced in 2008 and iterated ever since, the brand has not really had a handbag hit. (The accessory designer who created the PS1, Darren Spaziani, is now at Louis Vuitton, and Proenza has a new accessories guru — hired from Vuitton.)

credit: polyvore.com

credit: polyvore.com

What about all those rumors about men’s wear and other category expansion?

“They’ve dabbled in men’s leather goods in the past, but whenever anyone starts talking about men’s wear, I say I want to talk about handbags,” Mr. Frasch said, who also didn’t want to talk much about new stores. “It’s not an immediate priority,” he said.

But merchandising and marketing are.

“There are certain brands, if you say their name, one thing comes to mind,” Mr. Frasch said. Hermès? Birkin bag. MaxMara? Coats.

“We don’t have that yet, that go-to category that really defines the brand,” he continued.

Mr. Frasch said he and the Proenza designers and founders Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez had dinner on Monday night, and they spent the whole meal discussing the subject. “They get it,” he said. The three men have known one another for years; Mr. Frasch was a supporter of Proenza Schouler when he was the chief merchant of Saks Fifth Avenue.

(The history may help explain Proenza’s decision to sign with Castanea rather than LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton. According to someone familiar with the LVMH conversations but who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of the topic, part of the issue also was that LVMH and Proenza Schouler were never able to agree on the value of the brand, with the luxury group feeling that Proenza’s numbers were simply too high. Mr. Frasch said that the valuation Castanea settled on was on the “higher end.”)

Which particular categories were they thinking about?

“Dresses and knitwear,” Mr. Frasch said. “At a respectable price, with a Jack and Lazaro twist. When I first saw the pre-collection, I was worried because I didn’t think there was enough fashion in there, and customers want fashion from us, but it was there. And we’re going to work on shoes. Shoes could be a very important business for us.”

All of which is going to take some time, Mr. Frasch acknowledged, which is why the Castanea plan for Proenza involved a seven-year (as opposed to the more common three- to five-year) commitment before Castanea’s exit, though he said the group might remain with the brand longer, if necessary.

“As much as we in New York and fashion know the brand, the rest of the world doesn’t really know it,” Mr. Frasch said. “We have to correct that.” REPORTING BY: Vanessa Friedman (On The Runway) The New York Times

The Tale of Dominance by the Legendary Birkin Bag.

It’s safe to say that if you want to buy a Birkin, and you can afford one, it will eventually be yours. In the meantime, the exclusivity — both perceived and real — generates plenty of cultural cachet and continues the cycle of sales.

MIAMI, United States — When Hermès opens its new Miami Design District flagship on Nov. 6, local clients will find a selection of leather goods, fashion, and accessories chosen specifically for them. Every Hermès outpost is run like an independent boutique, with a store director who visits Paris each year to buy pieces he or she believes will appeal to the location’s particular flavour.

But certain items resonate, no matter where in the world they land. Consider the Birkin Sellier 40, the latest version of what a casual observer might call the original It Bag. Crafted out of what is called Hunter cowhide—which holds its shape without much manipulation—the 40-centimeter-long style is unlined, with raw-edge straps, palladium hardware, and a retail price of $14,900.

The Sellier 40 will be available in Miami, although “available” is a relative term. Birkins of all shapes, sizes, and styles still sell out instantly, with wait lists typical of 10 or 15 years ago. The Birkin really holds up, says Robert Chavez, Hermès’s chief executive officer in the U.S. “Customers appreciate the quality, craftsmanship and timeless style.” ‘Elite Sales

Yes, clients are suckers for a solid product that takes 18 to 20 hours to make from start to finish, all done by one craftsperson (who starts by selecting just the right piece of leather or exotic skin for the bag and ends with a series of painstaking quality control tests). But they are also suckers for careful, shadow marketing, high prices, limited supply, and a permanent air of exclusivity. It’s probaby the latter, more than the former, that has kept the Birkin the most elite handbag in the world.

In Hermès’s 2014 fiscal year, sales of leather goods and saddlery reached €1.8 billion ($2 billion), up nearly 13 percent from €1.6 billion in 2013. And in the first quarter of 2015, category sales reached €511 million, a jump of nearly 25 percent from last year’s €410 million. That’s at a time when most luxury brands are struggling globally in the face of changing Chinese and Russian markets and when major currency imbalances between regions has chilled shopping on the higher end.

The 178-year-old company does not report how many Birkins are sold every year, or what percentage of that leather sales figure is attributable to the line. Secrecy and success are intertwined.

Shadow Marketing

Hermès does not market the Birkin through traditional print, online, or television advertising. Instead, the company relies on the bag’s perceived exclusivity and prestige. If the world knew how many bags were churned out every year, the luster would likely dim. The only thing Hermès wants you know about the bag’s availability is that you probably can’t get one.

“Hermès was very smart in not flooding the market with Birkins,” says Mario Ortelli, a luxury goods analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein.

Indeed, an entire chapter in the buzzy new memoir Primates of Park Avenue is dedicated to author Wednesday Martin’s obsession with owning one of these elusive satchels. Those who try often face a months-long waiting list.How to Get a Birkin

“No one can walk in and buy a Birkin ‘from the back,’” says Michelle Goad, CEO of P.S. Dept., a personal shopping app that services 20,000 luxury customers globally. “The key to getting one is to find someone who has a relationship with one of their associates, [which means they’ve] bought one in the past.”

If this sounds a bit like a Catch-22, that’s because it is: To be sold a Birkin, you have to have bought one already. Unless you get lucky.

Very occasionally customers can waltz into an Hermès shop and scoop up a surprisingly available version — the 2009 memoir, Bringing Home the Birkin: My Life in Hot Pursuit of the World’s Most Coveted Handbag, detailed personal shopper Michael Tonello’s experience in doing that very thing — but that’s far from the norm. Instead, you need to snag a spot on an unofficial waitlist. And then wait.

“Think of it like almost being interviewed,” says Goad. “You have to have a purchase history at the store to just get started, then they meet with you, assess how serious you are about spending, and then you go on their list.

“They get deliveries of these bags sporadically every week — we’re talking two units at a time, not full deliveries, so there aren’t any just sitting on shelves. Associates first prioritize the customers with ‘relationships,’ then whatever inventory is left will be open to their wait list.”

P.S. Dept. was recently able to secure a Birkin for a client within one month of her request, which Goad readily admits was a lot of “right time, right place,” noting three- to six-month waits as the norm. Flexibility helped, too. “This client was very open to sizes and colour—she just wanted one of the bags—which made it much easier to get her one.”

Hermès’s Chavez echoes the sentiment on being flexible, although he denies that there is any “specific waitlist.”

“When something comes available, we will call them and invite them to come in and see the bag we have,” he explains. “Sometimes they are willing to be flexible in size or hardware, if they want to accept the bag we are offering. If a client wants to stay specifically with every detail they requested, it will take a bit longer, but they are willing to wait.”Steady Market Share

So it’s also safe to say that if you want to buy a Birkin, and you can afford one, it will eventually be yours. In the meantime, the exclusivity — both perceived and real (from price and specific design details) — generates plenty of cultural cachet and continues the cycle of sales. Along with the dozens of written accounts, a legendary episode of Sex and the City centers on Samantha’s quest to procure the unicorn of handbags.

This sort of free publicity is the best kind available: money-can’t-buy word-of-mouth that puffs up the tightly controlled distribution system.

Meanwhile, the handbag market is constantly changing. Brands at all levels are raising their prices, from Louis Vuitton’s $5,600 Capucines to Céline’s $6,200 lizard box bag. The number of choices has increased, too. Today, Hermès’s competition includes not only Chanel and Dior but also Moynat, Marc Cross, the Row, and so on. While Hermès’s share of the luxury leather goods market has remained steady over the past decade or so — 6 percent in both 2004 and 2013 — research by Exane BNP Paribas suggests that the number of “other” brands competing has increased to 41 percent of total market share in 2013 from 38 percent in 2004. (Louis Vuitton’s market share has decreased to 18 percent in 2013, from 23 percent in 2004.)

Maintaining the Crown

So what’s a category leader like Hermès to do? Offering newness is one strategy, and the horsey leather goods house does tend to introduce a new bag on the runway every other season or so. For Fall 2014, it was the Hazlan, a shoulder bag that can be seamlessly converted into a crossbody, tote, or clutch. At her Fall 2015 debut, the company’s newly appointed women’s creative director, Nadege Vanshee-Cybulski, introduced the Octogone bag, which looks exactly as it sounds. (It’s an octagon.)

But it is the Birkin that remains the crown jewel. Indeed, a version featuring diamond-and-gold hardware recently fetched $223,000 at auction in Hong Kong. So the brand is focusing on offering more and rarer specialized options, all while keeping the quality top-notch. There is the Birkin Shadow, the Birkin Ghillies, the Birkin So-Black, as well as hundreds of color and skin combinations in four standard sizes: 25cm, 30cm, 35cm, and 40cm styles (Store directors are tasked with selecting unique options that will appeal to the store’s local clientele, although Hermès won’t reveal what styles appeal where.)

For the most devoted customers—and by that we mean the biggest spenders — the company offers customization. Sales associates are schooled on the hundreds of available combinations so that serious collectors can easily purchase their dream Birkin. “We do take special orders, but in a small way,” Chavez says. “If we can meet a client’s expectations, we will consider a special order.”Personalized Core

In many ways, customization has always been at the core of the Birkin. The bag, after all, was first made to the specifics of its namesake, actress and singer Jane Birkin, who needed a carryall to handle her Hermès diary. But personalization is just another way to reel in the forever client. If she wants something truly unlike anything anyone else has in the world, she can have it.

In a sense, the company is doubling down on the bag — committing to training 200 new craftspeople across categories each year and continuing to increase production. Hermès points to two new workshops in the Rhône Alpes and Poitou Charentes regions of France as a source for its success in 2014. (Two more new workshops in the Franche-Comté region will open in 2016.) Craftsmen are trained for a minimum of five years and will receive additional training if they are to work with exotic skins.

“Even as it has become more mass, it’s distributed around the world and not very exposed,” says the luxury analyst Ortelli. “You don’t find it in the store. The unofficial waiting list keeps it under control.”Quiet Luxury

As Hermès has increased production, demand has also amazingly increased, thanks to a mix of factors. One is that Asia’s wealthy are less and less interested in logos (a demure Hermès label only appears hidden under the top flap of the Birkin). That goes hand in hand with the global rise of quiet luxury — the idea that refined, minimalist goods speak volumes more without saying as much. For the modern high-net-worth consumer, Hermès is thebrand: It’s both pricey and subtle.

The classic 25cm Birkin starts at $9,400, more than double what it was in 2000. Many exotic-skin styles reach well into five figures. (The new 40cm in crocodile is priced at $68,000.) And while other “quiet luxury” labels have emerged as competitors to Hermès, no one else — not even Chanel — is able to justify those sorts of figures for its goods. “The real fortune of the Birkin is that no other brand has built an iconic bag in that price range [yet],” Ortelli says.

Still, the company will continue to have to innovate. “Sooner or later, there will be another iconic product from another iconic brand,” he continues.

What Hermès must instead rely on, now and in the future, is the unmatched trust consumers have in its name.

“No other brand has such a believable heritage,” Ortelli adds. “To trade up from a Birkin, Victoria Beckham had to open her own fashion brand.” It should take her only a couple hundred years to catch up.

REPORTING BY: BLOOMBERG/edited by BOF staff

Luxury: Hermès introduces the Cape Cod Zebra Pegasus watch for you to drool!

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If you think you know everything about Hermes (i mean, the French luxury fashion house, not your dadbod namesake neighbor hunk), then monument should be erected in your honor! Hermes is not just about the Birkin bag!

The French luxury fashion icon incorporate the design of one of its famous luxurious silk scarves for the motif of its new luxury watch. The Cape Cod Zebra Pegasus, a scarf designed Alice Shirley featuring a mythical winged horse, was reincarnated as a decoration for the intricate jewellery watch-face.

Both techniques used were highly demanding work of arts (engraving and grand feu enamelling), both used to create the miniature painting of the zebra and the cloisonné technique featured on the intricate 22-carat gold plate wings.

The watches, like any work-of-art, come framed, this time in a 750 white gold case and the signature Hermès H 1837 movement imparts vibrant mechanical life to the technical functioning. There are four unique different variants of the Cape Cod Zebra Pegasus watch and each is created to the exacting technical standards of Hermès.

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SOURCE: buro247

Sotheby’s sold the “perfect” 100-carat diamond for $22.1 million at NY auction.

Sotheby's To Auction Joe DiMaggio's 1936 Yankees Uniform

Sotheby’s Auction House

“Big girls need big diamonds”- Elizabeth Taylor

NEW YORK (Reuters) – An eye-popping, 100-carat diamond, the highlight of a magnificent jewels sale in New York on Tuesday, sold for $22.1 million, Sotheby’s auction house said.

The perfect classic emerald-cut D color diamond, which is about the size of a walnut and was mined by De Beers in southern Africa, was purchased by an anonymous buyer via a telephone bid. It had a pre-sale estimate of $19 million to $25 million.

Gary Schuler, the head of Sotheby’s jewelry department in New York, said the gem is the definition of perfection.

“The color is whiter than white, it is free of any internal perfections, and so transparent that I can only compare it to a pool of water,” he explained.

A model displays both a 100.20-carat diamond and a 25.59-carat ruby diamond at a pre-auction viewing at Sotheby's in Hong Kong April 3, 2015. The diamond, described as "internally flawless" by the auction house, sold for $22 million in a New York auction on April 21, 2015. The Burmese cushion-shaped ruby diamond 'The Sunrise Ruby', mounted by Cartier as a ring, is expected to fetch between $12-18 million in Geneva on May 12, 2015. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

A model displays both a 100.20-carat diamond and a 25.59-carat ruby diamond at a pre-auction viewing at Sotheby’s in Hong Kong April 3, 2015. The diamond, described as “internally flawless” by the auction house, sold for $22 million in a New York auction on April 21, 2015. The Burmese cushion-shaped ruby diamond ‘The Sunrise Ruby’, mounted by Cartier as a ring, is expected to fetch between $12-18 million in Geneva on May 12, 2015. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

The $22.1 million price, which includes the buyer’s premium, fell short of the $30.6 million world record price paid for a 118.28 carat white diamond in Hong Kong in 2013. Sotheby’s said only six perfect diamonds weighing more than 100 carats have been sold at auction in the last 25 years.

A flawless pink diamond, dubbed the “Pink Star,” set a world record price for a gemstone at auction when it sold for $83.02 million in Geneva in 2013.

Schuler said the distinguishing characteristic of the huge diamond sold on Tuesday is its size and beautiful shape. Originally weighing over 200 carats, its owner spent more than a year perfecting its cut and polish.

Sotheby’s said that from 1990 to 2013 the price per carat for a 100-carat perfect diamond had risen from $125,000 to $260,000.

courtesy: Sothebys

courtesy: Sothebys

The diamond was the top selling item in a sale of more than 350 jewels that were expected to sell for a total of more than $50 million.

Other highlights include a pear-shaped purplish pink diamond weighing 6.24 carats that has a pre-sale estimate of up to $3.5 million as well as a blue diamond and colored diamond ring weighing 6.06 carats that could bring in as much as $4.5 million.

Two Cartier Art Deco jewels, a rare platinum, emerald, sapphire, lapis lazuli and diamond pendant necklace as well as a ruby, emerald and diamond bracelet, will also be auctioned.

The Baron de Rothschild necklace is expected to sell for up to $2.2 million and the bracelet has a pre-sale estimate of up to $1.8 million.

Two Kashmir sapphire and diamond rings could each bring in $1 million or more, according to Sotheby’s.

Chanel to launch E-Commerce in 2016 and Louis Vuitton becomes “brand for secretaries” in China

courtesy: daxueconsulting.com

courtesy: daxueconsulting.com

Chanel, one of the most iconic fashion brands that does not offer e-commerce on products (accessories and couture) other than cosmetics — and completely shunned ordinary customers to shop its high-end wares online — has apparently decided to get with the times. It finally succumbs to the power of e-commerce.

Bruno Pavlovsky, Chanel’s president of fashion, confirmed the house’s plan to launch e-commerce that could happen as early as next September. “It’s not so much a shift. It’s an evolution to better serve our customers,” Pavlovsky explained, adding, “So it’s more e-service than a pure e-commerce approach.”

credit: fashionunited.com

credit: fashionunited.com

The company also plans to launch e-commerce sites for milliner Maison Michel, Barrie Knitwear and glove-maker Causse alongside its own. “We are testing the approach,” he told Bridget Foley. [WWD]

Whatever happened in the future of couture, we’ll all be watching.

Frenzy at LV!!! credit: chinesetourists.com

Frenzy at LV!!!
credit: chinesetourists.com

China’s elite are turning their noses up at Louis Vuitton, as the brand explodes in popularity with the middle class.

A recent Business Insider articles about consumer perceptions of Louis Vuitton in China mentioned that top-tier consumer tastes are shifting away from the French luxury giant.

Ewan Rambourg, HSBC Managing Director author of The Bling Dynasty: Why the Reign of Chinese Luxury Shoppers Has Only Just Begun, claims China’s elite are increasingly interested in a more subtle version of luxury, and the perception in the market is that Vuitton can’t provide it.

credit: wantchinatime

credit: wantchinatime

“Japanese people used to purchase luxury products to fit in whereas Chinese are buying the goods to stand out,” Rambourg writes.

Now China’s very high-end consumers are abandoning the label for even more expensive brands or bespoke goods. A typical Chinese luxury shopper, he claims, might think, “I can’t buy Vuitton, I’ve seen it too much, it’s a brand for secretaries.”

sourcewww.businessinsider.com

Crazy Rich: The Top Private Jet Routes in the World

credit: businessinsider.com

credit: businessinsider.com

The life you wished you could afford but since economy poke you with a pony, it is OK to dream. Being crazily rich and fabulously wealthy means having to escape a long queue, no cramped spaces, avoid smelling cheap perfumes at the airport and the whole plane at your personal disposal- flying anywhere in the world, ANYTIME! Flying in a private jet is the stuff where dreams are made of, but to those whose genes breathe fresh Alpine air and slept in 1000 counts of Egyptian thread cotton, it’s a luxury like no other.

A 2015 Wealth Report published by Knight Frank shows a list of the top 10 private jet routes in the world for 2013. The report also shows the top 10 fastest growing private jet routes. Take a look below!

credit: bigmoneylifestyle.com

credit: bigmoneylifestyle.co

Top 10 Routes Worldwide:
1. Moscow -to- Nice/Côte d’Azur
2. Miami -to- New York
3. New York -to- Los Angeles
4. New York -to- West Palm Beach
5. London -to- New York
6. London -to- Moscow
7. London -to- Nice/Côte d’Azur
8. Chicago -to- New York
9. Houston -to- New York
10. West Palm Beach -to- New York
Top 10 Fastest Growing Routes:
1. Nice/Côte d’Azur -to- New York
2. Maiquetía -to- Miami
3. Dubai -to- London
4. Pittsburgh -to- New York
5. Houston -to- West Palm Beach
6. Moscow -to- Tel Aviv
7. Houston -to- Midland (Texas)
8. Lagos -to- London
9. Austin -to- Houston
10. Houston -to- Washington DC

So just who are these wealthy flyers and what do they do? Well according to the report which uses data collected by NetJets, around 80% of these luxury flyers are male, aged 40-55. It also states that the majority are private entrepreneurs whose wealth comes from finance and oil and gas industries, followed closely by those in property and technology industries.  By the sounds of this, if you ever want a private jet of your own, you’d better get working on that big business idea!

source: www.escapehere.com

Buckingham Palace valued at $1.55bn and Oprah Winfrey’s California estate at $85m: The World’s most expensive homes revealed.

No matter how many mansions and palaces a billionaire built, nothing beats the luxurious Buckingham Palace, the official residence of the world’s most powerful royals (Queen Elizabeth and the Windsors), on top of the list of the most expensive homes in the world!

But don’t you know that a billionaire from India almost unseat the Queen of England’s palace? Mukesh Ambani, the richest man in India, came in second place when he built the “Antillia” in 2010, the world’s first “home” to cross the $1billion price tag.

The graph also included other most expensive homes including the Odeon Tower Penthouse in Monaco, the world’s most expensive apartment, at $400 million.

The most expensive celebrity homes in the world belongs to US chat show queen, Oprah Winfrey, with her California estate valued at $85m.

“With facts about the luxurious properties – and their owners – the graph by Comparecamp.com reveals four London homes make the top 10 – as well as three in California, and one in France, New York, Montana, Monaco and Ireland.”

Oh, money, money, money!!!

Most Expensive Homes_full design_2nd version_finale